The Department of Interior has received a 106 million dollar increase in this
year’s budget to purchase land to store wild horses it has captured and removed
from the wild lands of the west to make room for cattle and other interests.
This brings their budget to a total of 445.4 million dollars. At the same time,
the Department of Interior’s Bureau of Land Management has just
rejected a money saving proposal to the taxpayer by Madeline Pickens. She
had offered to take a substantial number of wild horses into her eco-sanctuary
in northern Nevada.
In 2011 the Department of Interior is proposing a list of land acquisitions to
advance their projects. The BLM’s request of 83.7 million dollars includes 42.5
million for the proposed planning and acquisition of a Wild Horse Preserve,
which is part of the Department’s Wild Horse and Burro National Management
Strategy.
These wild horse preserves are not slated for family bands of wild horses but
for non-reproducing herds. What will they use the “treasured lands” for in 20
years when the non-reproducing herds die? The plan mentions alleviating the
numbers of wild horses in short term holding but what about the horses in long
term holding? As BLM continues to remove wild horses at an alarming rate, they
estimates the number of captured wild horses in government holding will be
45,955 by the end of FY2011 and the holding costs are expected to be 47.8
million dollars.
In the Wild Horse and Burro Program overview in the FY2011 Budget Justification,
among the program components list, one of the BLM’s responsibilities is stated
as “Determining whether AML (appropriate management levels) should be achieved
by removal or destruction of excess animals, or other options such as
sterilization or natural controls of population levels”
It is noticeable that in the 2007 – 2012 Strategic Plan for the Department of
Interior there is no mention of the wild horses or burros at all, even where the
plan lists specific programs administered by the BLM. This carries on throughout
the Strategic Plan for 2011 – 2016 where the only mention of the Wild Horse and
Burro Program is on page 8, under BLM programs, listed after Renewable and
Conventional Energy and Mineral Development, Forestry Management and Timber and
Biomass Production.
“I was thinking of all the places BLM/DOI could hide things in a budget and of
course the management of lands and resources came to mind.” said Maureen
VanDerStad of Grass Roots Horse. “Hidden within 600 pages of the FY 2011 DOI
Budget Justifications were clues hidden among the layers of what I would call
deliberate and willful actions by these agencies to mislead Congress and the
American people as to their true intentions, which is to get what they want at
all costs.”
Within the FY2011 Budget Justification set forth by DOI/BLM, regarding the Wild
Horse and Burro Program and statistics there are many fallacies and untruths,
many of which are found, not in the section called Reforming the Wild Horse and
Burro Program but in the Management of Lands and Resources, in various sub
activity sections.
In Section DH-38 of DOI budget 2011 in a segment called Treasured Landscapes, is
the news that Ken Salazar has achieved his goal of getting millions of dollars
to fund what is known as his “Salazoo Plan” created ostensibly to bring relief
to the BLM’s failed Wild Horse and Burro Program.
The wild horse preserve plan refers to “partners”. Who are these “partners
exactly ? Foreign countries ?
“The program has failed and continues to fail not because of the reasons stated
by BLM or DOI but when looked at in terms of the plans DOI has for public lands,
the wild horses and burros who have a Congressional right to live free roaming
on those lands, just don’t fit in to the plan. A great many things do not add up
in the budget justification that DOI/BLM has set forth. Statements presented as
fact by DOI/BLM to Congress are not even matching up with the DOI/BLM’s own
previous statements or actions. The ramifications of this apparent mismanagement
of both public lands and a federally protected American icon are mind blowing”
concluded VanDerStad.
Grass Roots Horse is a 501(c) 3 non-profit organization, engaged on many
fronts regarding this issue. Please visit
www.grassrootshorse.com for legal filings and press releases and
http://blog.grassrootshorse.com for up to the minute reports from wherever
wild horses are.